Monday, May 23, 2016

“Dr. Death” isn’t so unusual in
the psychiatric industry – exhibit documents the pseudoscience and sordid
history of psychiatry.

“That’s almost more than I can stomach, but at least I know the truth
now,” said one visitor exiting “Psychiatry: An Industry of Death,” an
international touring exhibit which opened Sunday for a week-long stay in
Atlanta.

Hosted by Citizens Commission on Human Rights of Georgia, the
museum-style displays document a side of psychiatry’s past that is rarely seen.
Historical and contemporary footage, including interviews with over 150 experts
and survivors, covers the brutal psychiatric treatments of the past and trace
its history through the labels and drugs used today. Georgia State Senator
Donzella James, officiating the ribbon cutting, told attendees, “Don’t take my
word for it. I’m here today to help open up this [exhibit] so that you can come
and see for yourself, and know what psychiatry is doing.”

Deb MacKay, regional coordinator for CCHR, said that plans for the
exhibit were already in place when Atlantans received news about the indictment
of psychiatrist Narendra Nagareddy, nicknamed “Dr. Death” after thirty-six of
his patients died while he was prescribing them controlled substances. "Dr. Death is just a footnote in a long
history of medical abuse,” said MacKay, “That’s ‘business as usual’ for many in
this profession.” MacKay was standing
near an exhibit vignette titled Psychiatric Criminality which notes
“psychiatrists and psychologists have an inordinately high number of criminal
convictions as compared to other sectors of the health care profession.”

The exhibit brings facts and figures on such topics as “using ‘science’
to promote racism” and “labeling and over-drugging children.” A section is devoted to electroshock,
explaining concerns that led to a demonstration in downtown Atlanta last weekend,
where hundreds of participants representing CCHR, the Nation of Islam, the
NAACP and Concerned Black Clergy protested the American Psychiatric
Association’s Annual Meeting and denounced the APA’s request to the FDA to
allow electroshock on children and teens who are “treatment resistant,” meaning
drugs didn’t work.

With eight million children in the U.S. already on psychotropic drugs
and a growing awareness of the harm and inefficacy of these drugs, protesters
feared the label “treatment resistant” would be applied to thousands of
children to justify giving them electroshock.

At a press conference following the march, one survivor of
electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) said he received “30 rounds of electroshock” in
one year at age 21. He described how he
had no memory of his high school years and broke into tears while recounting
“sitting there, and my father having to teach me how to tie my shoes again.”

“This is unconscionable to even consider doing this to a child,” said
Dr. Linda Lagemann, a clinical psychologist who retired after 23 years in
practice. “Someone’s getting rich and someone’s getting hurt. This really must
be stopped.”

Georgia may soon join a growing list of states to enact protections
against ECT for minors. Senator James is
championing the effort and recently called for legislation to ban its use on
children. She said Georgia’s provisions to protect children and others from ECT
were grossly insufficient and cited a World Health Organization recommendation
to governments that: “There are no indications for the use of ECT on minors,
and hence this should be prohibited through legislation.”

At the exhibit, Georgians can show their support for Senator James’
legislation by signing a petition for the ban of ECT on children.

The exhibit is free and runs through Sunday, May 29, 11 am to 7 pm
daily at Piedmont Park Greystone, 400 Park Dr NE. It has toured more than 441 major cities in
the U.S. and around the world and has educated over 800,000 people on the
history and contemporary practices of psychiatry.

CCHR is a non-profit, non-political, non-religious mental health
watchdog. Initially established by the Church of Scientology and renowned
psychiatrist Dr. Thomas Szasz in 1969. CCHR’s mission is to eradicate abuses
committed under the guise of mental health and enact patient and consumer
protections. CCHR has helped to enact more than 150 laws protecting individuals
from abusive or coercive mental health practices.

Friday, May 20, 2016

The Nashville Church of Scientology is observing World
Environment Day on June 2nd with a roundtable event for the environment.

The Church of Scientology is inviting key environmental
advocates to a roundtable discussion on the theme: “It’s Your City – Green it
Up,” to be held on June 2nd in honor of World Environment Day. Officials at the
church say that this initiative will bring people together that care about the
environment so they can connect and can do bigger things together.

“Our members care about the Earth. We all depend on it, it’s up
to all of us to take care of it,” says Pastor of the Church, Rev. Brian Fesler,
“we would like to extend an invitation to those committed to the environment to
join us at this roundtable event.”

World Environment Day occurs each year on June 5th and is
celebrated by the United Nations. Last year, the worldwide theme for the day
was “Seven Billion Dreams. One Planet. Consume with Care.” According to
unep.org, World Environment Day “…has grown to be a broad, global platform for
public outreach that is widely celebrated by stakeholders in over 100
countries. It also serves as the ‘people’s day’ for doing something positive
for the environment, galvanizing individual actions into a collective power
that generates an exponential positive impact on the planet.”

“That’s exactly what we are aiming to create in Nashville,”
says Rev. Fesler.

“Green it Up” will take place on June 2nd at 3:00 pm. For more
information or to participate, contact Julie Brinker at the church,
615-687-4600.

Monday, May 16, 2016

Anticipation
mounted as hundreds of activists, clergy, civil rights advocates and supporters
lined up to march in protest of electroshock on children during the annual
convention of the American Psychiatric Association. But no one could foresee
what would happen next.

One would expect the Citizens Commission on Human Rights, the
international mental health watchdog, to take a stand against electroshocking
of children. But when CCHR takes that message
to the heart of Atlanta during the annual convention of the American
Psychiatric Association (APA)—and is joined by representatives of the NAACP, the
Nation of Islam, 10,000 Fearless Men, Black Lives Matter and Concerned Black
Clergy—one has to look deeper.

Participants in the protest reported that bystanders were
“shocked” to learn this practice is still common, stunned to learn that the APA
is currently pressuring the Food and Drug Administration to expand its use
against children. “You mean they still
do that?” responded one of the march viewers, a security guard on the property
where the APA event took place. “I
thought that went out in the ‘40s!”

Not so, says Mental Health America, reporting that “ECT is
administered to an estimated 100,000 people a year, primarily in general
hospital psychiatric units and in psychiatric hospitals.” And this while FDA agencies are already aware
it is a dangerous procedure. In fact,
the FDA’s Office of Device Evaluation, a part of the Center for Devices and
Radiological Health, issued a draft guidance in early 2016 recommending a “prominently
placed” warning on ECT devices to include “The long-term safety and
effectiveness of ECT treatment has not been demonstrated.”

The same report lists effects known to be associated with
ECT, ranging from long-term problems with “autobiographical memory” (knowledge
about one’s own life), to pain and skin burns, to “insufficient, or lack of
breathing” and heart attack, stroke and death.

So as the march led to a panel discussion on ECT, and the
panel discussion into a symposium the following day, attendees asked, “Why on
Earth would anyone in their right mind push to use this against children?” Especially when one speaker, an ECT survivor
who received “30 rounds of electroshock” in one year, at age 21, described how
he had not one memory from his high school years, and broke into tears while
recounting “sitting there, and my father having to teach me how to tie my shoes
again.”

One participant seemed to have the answer. “This is unconscionable to even consider
doing this to a child,” said Dr. Linda Lagemann, a clinical psychologist who
retired after 23 years in practice. “Someone’s getting rich and someone’s
getting hurt. This really must be stopped.”

Long-term Georgia State Senator Donzella James, speaking during
the panel, called for state legislation to ban the use of ECT on children. She
said Georgia’s provisions to protect children and others from ECT were grossly
insufficient and cited a World Health Organization recommendation to
governments that: “There are no indications for the use of ECT on minors, and
hence this should be prohibited through legislation.”

The unanimous, resounding and spontaneous support for James’
proposal, a proposal so natural it should have long since been law, suddenly
explained what brought together this particular mix of political persuasions,
religious affiliations and socioeconomic delineations, and gave hope that, at
least when it comes to our children, we can find unity amongst diversity.

Thursday, May 12, 2016

On
May 9, 1950, a movement was launched with these words by L. Ron Hubbard:
“Dianetics is an adventure. It is an exploration into Terra Incognita, the
human mind, that vast and hitherto unknown realm half an inch back of our
foreheads.” He further invited readers to “Treat it as an adventure. And may
you never be the same again.” Millions have done just that.

To
commemorate this anniversary, the Nashville Church of Scientology will hold a
Dianetics anniversary celebration next week to share news of the application of
Dianetics technology across the South.

Now
available in 165 nations in 50 languages, more than 21 million copies of
Dianetics: The Modern Science of Mental Health have been sold and it has
appeared on a record 116 bestseller lists.

Dianetics
sparked the movement that ultimately led to the founding of the Scientology
religion, the only major religion to emerge in the 20th century. L. Ron Hubbard
went on to document his research into the spirit, mind and life in 18 Basic
books, thousands of other written materials and nearly 2,500 recorded
lectures—the Scripture of Scientology.

Today,
L. Ron Hubbard's works are studied and applied daily in over a thousand
Dianetics centers, Scientology churches, missions and organizations around the
world. The Dianetics Seminar has seen much success in Nashville where it is
delivered out of the Hubbard Dianetics Foundation, a department within the
Church of Scientology.

For
more information on Dianetics, visit the Dianetics website at
www.Dianetics.org. For an interactive audiovisual overview of the life and
works of L. Ron Hubbard, visit www.LRonHubbard.org.

Wednesday, May 11, 2016

Mental health watchdog Citizens Commission on Human Rights will be
protesting the American Psychiatric Association (APA) in Atlanta, Georgia on
May 14th to oppose their recent push to reclassify electroshock devices to
include its use on children. CCHR was established in 1969 by the Church of
Scientology and psychiatrist Thomas Szasz as a non-religious, non-political
mental health watchdog.

The American Psychiatric Association (APA) has called on the Food and
Drug Administration (FDA) to reclassify electroshock (ECT) devices as low risk
and has recommended that it include ECT use on children.[1] The mental health
industry watchdog, Citizens Commission on Human Rights (CCHR), has long opposed
the APA's use of electroshock due to its devastating effects on patients, and
will be protesting their latest push to expand its use on children at the APA's
annual convention in Atlanta, Georgia, May 14, 2016. CCHR was established in
1969 by the Church of Scientology and eminent psychiatrist, Prof. Thomas Szasz.

CCHR says that while most Americans don't realize that electroshock is
still used, the fact is more than 100,000 are electroshocked in the U.S.
alone—every year.[2] The APA now wants to expand this, including using
electroshock on children.[1]

The APA states that "having access to a rapid and effective
treatment such as ECT is especially meaningful in children and
adolescents…."[1] But CCHR points out how the electroshocking of children
actually happens:

A child is laid out on a bed and put under anesthesia.[3] Then they are
administered a muscle relaxant. The use of muscle relaxants prior to being
electroshocked is due to the fact that the convulsions from electroshock were
so violent, that patients commonly used to break bones.[4] The use of muscle
relaxants in modern electroshock procedures already puts the child at risk: The
American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry states in their
"Practice Parameters for Use of Electroconvulsive Therapy With
Adolescents," that, "Muscle relaxation is achieved with
succinylcholine."[3] According to the label for succinylcholine, the drug
can cause cardiac arrest, severe, prolonged respiratory muscle paralysis, and
potentially life-threatening and/or fatal allergic reactions.[5] The
recommended voltage given in today's ECT is actually higher than when patients
were breaking bones from convulsions—the muscle relaxant may make it appear
less violent than earlier forms of electroshock, but the voltage is up to 3
times higher.[6] Next, electrodes are placed on one side of the head of a child
or on both temples; the ECT machine is turned on, sending up to 460 volts and
between 550 and 1,000 milliamps of electricity (depending on the machine)
through the child's brain. This electricity shocks the brain producing a
seizure that lasts about 60 seconds.[7] According to the FDA, ECT can cause
physical trauma (including fractures, contusions, injury from falls, dental and
oral injury) prolonged or delayed onset seizure and complications, including
heart attack and even death. Along with these possible outcomes are permanent
memory loss, confusion and cognitive dysfunction.[8]

In addition to the APA calling for the use of electroshock on children
diagnosed with depression and bipolar, they include recommending its use on
children who meet the criteria for "treatment resistance," which is
often broadly defined as "failure to achieve response or remission to at
least one proven antidepressant."[9] CCHR says that instead, the APA
should be reviewing the 286 international drug regulatory agency warnings
citing side effects of hallucinations, mania, psychosis, suicidal ideation,
worsening depression, addiction, withdrawal and a host of other common side
effects. CCHR states this could open the door to the possibility of any child
being labeled "treatment-resistant" simply because the drugs aren't
working. There are already more than 8 million U.S. children are on these
dangerous drugs, including 1 million between the ages of 0-5 [10].

CCHR also points out that ECT device manufacturers do not, and cannot,
guarantee the electroshock machines are safe or effective for use on a child,
let alone an adult. Since 1978, the FDA classified the ECT devices as a
restrictive Class III, demonstrating "an unreasonable risk of illness or
injury." This is because the manufacturers have never conducted clinical
trials on the machines and, despite being required to do so, the FDA failed to
enforce their own order for the trials to be conducted.[11]

In continuing its long expose of electroshock and in particular on
children, CCHR is organizing a protest march at the annual APA convention in
downtown Atlanta, Georgia on Saturday, May 14, 2016. For more information on
the protest, visit cchrint.org.

References:

[1] Letter to Robert M. Califf, M.D., Commissioner, U.S. Food and Drug
Administration, from the American Psychiatric Association, March 10, 2016, p.
2, psychiatry.org/psychiatrists/advocacy/federal-affairs/patient-safety, click
on: "March 10: APA Comments to the FDA Concerning the Proposed Order and
Draft Guidance related to ECT Devices."

[3] "Practice Parameter for Use of Electroconvulsive Therapy With
Adolescents," Journal of the American Academy of Child and Adolescent
Psychiatry, Vol. 43, No. 12, December 2004, pp. 1521-1539,
jaacap.com/article/S0890-8567(09)61390-3/pdf.

Tuesday, May 3, 2016

The Big Payback is a 24-hour online giving event, highlighting the
great work of Middle Tennessee nonprofits and inspiring community-wide giving,
according to thebigpayback.org. Starting at midnight on Tuesday, May 3, 2016,
donors have 24 hours to make gifts online at www.TheBigPayback.org to 770
participating nonprofits, including schools and religious institutions, which
are located in or provide services in the 40 counties of Middle Tennessee.

This year, Criminon Tennessee is participating in this online gift
giving effort. Criminon Tennessee has been in operation since 2014, when it
graduated its first class from the Criminal Justice Center (CJC) Correctional
Facility in the heart of downtown Nashville. The Director of Criminon
Tennessee, Tracy Fesler, was proud to talk about the progress her students make
during their time in the program. “Some of these guys get in trouble because of
a momentary upset—one thing sets them off and they make a serious mistake that
puts them on track for years of self invalidation and degradation,” says
Fesler. “We help restore their self-respect so they can become a contributing
member of society and begin making up for damage they have done.”

The Criminon program is an evidence-based intervention that
creates safer communities through its education curricula for offenders. Criminon means “without crime,” and Criminon
Tennessee is a non-profit 501(c)(3) charitable organization. According to
criminontn.org, “[Criminon International] is the management body for the
network of Criminon chapters and offices in over 20 countries that services
over 11,000 offenders weekly.”

The fundamental principle that underlies the Criminon approach in
methodology is the restoration of the individual’s self-respect and common
sense values to avoid relapse into antisocial patterns of behavior.

During The Big Payback, gifts from the public are boosted with
funds from sponsors. Nonprofits vie for financial incentives, bonus donations
and additional prizes totaling more than $240,000 on the online leaderboard,
which will track donations in real time. Contribute to Criminon Tennessee by
visiting www.TheBigPayback.org, search for Criminon Tennessee, and complete the
easy and secure donation form.

In a
complete vindication of the Scientology religion and Scientologists, presiding
judge rules that entire case was a “serious and irremediable breach of the
right to a fair trial.”

Eighteen
years of judicial harassment of the Church of Scientology of Belgium and its
members ended today when a ruling of the Criminal Court in Brussels became
final. The 173-page decision found inadmissible
all proceedings against the defendants, including the Church of Scientology of
Belgium and the Human Rights Office of Church of Scientology International,
thereby declaring all charges of the federal prosecutor to be unfounded.

The
decision is final after a period during which the prosecution could have
filed an appeal but decided against it
on the grounds that the case was comprehensively reviewed by the court.

The Church of Scientology of Belgium welcomes this decision of the prosecution which makes final

the judgment of 11 March 2016. This is another of numerous decisions recognizing the rights of

Scientologists to be free of stigma and discrimination based on their religious beliefs. Such decisions

have been made throughout Europe—in Spain, Italy, UK, Germany, Portugal, Sweden, and the

Netherlands—all countries in which the Scientology religion has been recognized, often by supreme

courts.

For Eric Roux, spokesman of the Church in Belgium: "This decision is of course a victory for all

Scientologists and the end of an unfair harassment, but it is mostly a victory for freedom of religion in

Belgium. The federal prosecutor had unjustly sued Scientologists during 18 long years, and not having

found any committed offense, despite an extremely thorough investigation, has made the mistake of

wanting to continue the harassment based on misinterpretations of the writings of the Founder of

Scientology. This type of practice is extremely dangerous for freedom of conscience, and the Court has

put things back in order by reminding them of the elementary principles of law and the right of everyone

to practice the religion of their choice. The fact that the federal prosecutor has decided not to appeal

makes this decision even more important, and I am delighted to think that in the future, this can be

useful to those who might suffer discrimination because of their beliefs."

The Church of Scientology was founded in 1954 and has grown to thousands of churches with millions of members in over 180 countries. The Church began in Belgium in 1974 and today sponsors numerous social betterment campaigns, including drug prevention education, restoration of positive moral values​​, human rights education, and eradicating psychiatric abuse. The Church also works to organize other activities including Interfaith roundtables, distribution of clothes to refugees and clean ups.